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Lakes Villarrica, Calafquen, Panguipulli, and Rnihue, Chile January 1998.
The Piedmontane Lakes of Villarrica (lower left), Calafquen (near center),
Panguipulli (just right of center), and Rinihue (right center) are in central
Chile. All of these lakes evolved inside glacial troughs that descended
from the Andes. These lakes were built by terminal moraines, behind which
melting snow waters were dammed during de-glaciation thousands of years
ago. The lakes enjoy a balanced water budget and clean, clear water due
to the steady feeding by snowmelt in the high Andes Mountains (top portion
of image). The lakes are rich in fish, particularly trout. The region is
a renowned tourist attraction. Some snow-covered volcanoes are also visible
in the image. Villarrica is a stratovolcano is located just to southeast
of Lake Villarrica slightly below the left center of the image. About 20
explosive eruptions have occurred since 1558. The severe eruption in 1971
melted large volumes of snow and ice resulting in mudflows that killed 15
people. The last eruption of the volcano occurred late in 1992. In the upper
left corner of the image is Lanin, a dormant stratovolcano, actually located
in Argentina. Lanin Volcano, at 12388 feet (3807 meters) has not erupted
during historical times. Finally, in the upper right portion of the image
is Rinihue, a dormant 7946-foot (2424 meters) stratovolcano that also has
not erupted during historical times.
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